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Comment: Very Good used copy: Some light wear to cover, spine and page edges. Very minimal writing or notations in margins. Text is clean and legible. Possible clean ex-library copy with their stickers and or stamps.

Richard James Oglesby is best known for introducing the rail-splitter image into Abraham Lincoln's successful presidential campaign of 1860, and in many ways his career ran parallel to Honest Abe's. This biography of the three-time governor of Illinois offers the first detailed view of a key figure in the great changes that swept Illinois and the country from the Jacksonian era through the Gilded Age. Like Lincoln, Oglesby was born in Kentucky and spent most of his youth in central Illinois, apprenticing as a lawyer in Springfield and standing for election to the Illinois legislature, Congress, and U.S. Senate. Oglesby participated in the battles of Cerro Gordo and Vera Cruz during the Mexican-American War and made a small fortune in the gold rush of 1849. A superlative speaker, he ran unsuccessfully for Congress in a campaign that featured the Lincoln-Douglas debates of 1858, then was elected to the Illinois senate as Lincoln was being elected president. When the Civil War came, Oglesby resigned his senate seat to lead a regiment of the Union Army. Critically wounded at the Battle of Corinth, he was promoted to major general before resigning his commission to run successfully for governor of Illinois. Oglesby was at Lincoln's deathbed and led the effort to build the sixteenth president's tomb in Springfield, delivering the major oration at its dedication. In the postwar years, Oglesby drew on his popularity, his association with the martyred Lincoln, and his extraordinary stump-speaking skills to rescue the Illinois Republican Party in a time of political crisis. In his third term as governor, Oglesby faced massive labor unrest in the aftermath of the Haymarket affair. A mature and thoughtful biography, "Lincoln's Rail-Splitter" chronicles Oglesby's pivotal contribution to American political life, while also providing a sensitive portrait of this able, energetic man.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"A model of local biography cast in full national perspective... If [Oglesby] wrapped himself in the Lincoln legend and often waved the 'bloody shirt,' he simply lived the mandates of a life skillfully described in this graceful, prodigiously researched volume." -- Frank E. Vandiver, Civil War Book Review "A very well-written book that gives the reader a real sense of the subject and the extraordinary times in which Oglesby lived." -- The Pantagraph ADVANCE PRAISE "Mark Plummer's admirable, thoroughly-researched biography helps make clear why Lincoln called the affable, charming, colorful Oglesby an 'intimate personal friend.' Plummer presents new information shedding light not only on Oglesby and his terms as governor of Illinois and U.S. senator, but also on Lincoln and his tempestuous wife, on the Haymarket tragedy, and on the political culture of the Civil War, Reconstruction, and the Gilded Age." -- Michael Burlingame, author of The Inner World of Abraham Lincoln "A biography of Richard Oglesby is long overdue, and this attractive volume will be the standard on its subject for generations. Backed by massive research, Mark Plummer presents a clear and accessible chronicle of Oglesby's remarkable military and political careers, the interesting parallels of his life with that of Abraham Lincoln, and his association with the likes of John A. Logan, John M. Palmer, and Shelby Cullom." -- Rodney O. Davis, coeditor of Herndon's Informants: Letters, Interviews, and Statements about Abraham Lincoln

From the Inside Flap

"Mark Plummer's admirable, thoroughly-researched biography helps make clear why Lincoln called the affable, charming, colorful Oglesby an intimate personal friend.' Plummer presents new information shedding light not only on Oglesby and his terms as governor of Illinois and U.S. senator, but also on Lincoln and his tempestuous wife, on the Haymarket tragedy, and on the political culture of the Civil War, Reconstruction, and the Gilded Age." -- Michael Burlingame, author of The Inner World of Abraham Lincoln

"A biography of Richard Oglesby is long overdue, and this attractive volume will be the standard on its subject for generations. Backed by massive research, Mark Plummer presents a clear and accessible chronicle of Oglesby's remarkable military and political careers, the interesting parallels of his life with that of Abraham Lincoln, and his association with the likes of John A. Logan, John M. Palmer, and Shelby Cullom." -- Rodney O. Davis, coeditor of Herndon's Informants: Letters, Interviews, and Statements about Abraham Lincoln

Most Helpful Customer Reviews

i've already read this book once so i purchased it for a family member after we had all seen the new movie Lincoln. This book tells some of Lincoln's story from another angle. Very enjoyable if you're a history buff.